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hwold's avatar

Isn't oat pretty PUFAed ?

https://tools.myfooddata.com/nutrition-facts/168872/100g/1

Fat is 16% of calories, and ~40% of that fat is omega-6.

JaziTricks's avatar

Got Gemini to compare the protein details between the two.

When comparing wild-caught salmon and beef purely in terms of their **protein composition**—assuming you are consuming an equal amount of total protein from each—the discussion boils down to three main factors: **amino acid profiles**, **digestibility/bioavailability**, and the **"package"** that protein arrives in.

Because both are high-quality animal proteins, they are "complete" (containing all nine essential amino acids), but their structural breakdowns differ significantly.

### 1. Amino Acid Profile (The Building Blocks)

While both sources easily meet human requirements for essential amino acids (EAAs), their specific concentrations lean in different directions.

* **Wild-Caught Salmon** generally boasts a higher concentration of **sulfur-containing amino acids** (methionine and cysteine) and is exceptionally rich in **lysine**.

* **Beef** typically leads in **branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs)**—leucine, isoleucine, and valine—which are the primary drivers of muscle protein synthesis. Beef also contains significantly higher baseline levels of **glycine, proline, and hydroxyproline** because of its higher collagen content, as well as functional amino acid derivatives like **creatine, carnitine, and carnosine**.

Here is how they stack up relatively when matching gram-for-gram of total protein:

| Amino Acid / Compound | Wild-Caught Salmon | Beef | Highlighted Role |

|---|---|---|---|

| **Leucine** | High | **Higher** | Primary trigger for muscle protein synthesis. |

| **Methionine & Cysteine** | **Higher** | High | Crucial for cellular health, metabolism, and detoxification. |

| **Lysine** | **Higher** | High | Essential for growth, tissue repair, and immune function. |

| **Glycine & Proline** | Low to Moderate | **Higher** | Structural components for connective tissue and collagen. |

| **Creatine** | Moderate (~4g/kg) | **Higher** (~5g/kg) | Recycles ATP for short-burst cellular energy. |

### 2. Digestibility and Absorption

To understand how effectively your body utilizes these proteins, we look at the **DIAS (Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Score)**, which is the modern standard for measuring protein quality.

* **Beef** scores incredibly high on the DIAS scale (typically between 1.1 and 1.3). Its amino acid balance closely mirrors human skeletal muscle, and it is highly digestible.

* **Salmon** scores similarly high, but it possesses a distinct structural advantage: **lower connective tissue content**. Fish protein contains very little collagen compared to land animals, and its muscle fibers (myotomes) are much shorter.

> **The Digestibility Takeaway:** Because of this lack of tough connective tissue, salmon protein is broken down and digested more rapidly by the stomach and upper GI tract than beef. If you match the protein gram-for-gram, salmon will deliver its amino acids into your bloodstream slightly faster, whereas beef provides a more sustained, slower release of amino acids.

>

### 3. The Structural "Protein Package"

While the prompt assumes equal protein eaten, the structural matrices of these two foods alter how the protein behaves during cooking and digestion.

* **The Myofibrillar Matrix:** Beef protein is dense, bound tightly by collagen sheaths that require heat to soften into gelatin. Salmon protein is delicate; its proteins denature and coagulate at much lower temperatures. Overcooking salmon easily squeezes out moisture, compressing the protein matrix, whereas beef handles (and often requires) longer or higher heat profiles to optimize chewability.

* **The Micronutrient Add-ons:** The protein in wild salmon is inextricably bound to a matrix high in selenium, vitamin D, and astaxanthin (the antioxidant that makes it pink). Beef protein is bound to a matrix exceptionally rich in highly bioavailable heme iron, zinc, and vitamin B12.

### Summary

If you eat 30 grams of protein from wild salmon and 30 grams of protein from beef, your body gets a fantastic, complete dose of EAAs either way. Choose **beef** if you are prioritizing maximal leucine delivery for muscle building, creatine accumulation, or a slower, more satiating digestion rate. Choose **wild salmon** if you want rapid protein utilization, higher lysine/methionine ratios, and an easily digestible meal that won't sit heavily in the stomach.

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